<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038315_0001"/>
It Pays To Do Business<lb/>
With Those Businesses<lb/>
That Advertise With Us<lb/>
?4<lb/>
Eastt<lb/>
,rJ<lb/>
A tend Chapel Service!<lb/>
Each Tuesday At Noon<lb/>
In Austin Auditorium<lb/>
TUME XXVIII<lb/>
:r-4<lb/>
Columbia University Prof<lb/>
Director For Band Clinic<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1953<lb/>
Number 18<lb/>
9<lb/>
ivH, noted music edu-<lb/>
r of music at Teach-<lb/>
msbia university, and<lb/>
L2 North Carolina music<lb/>
: :vt:ng student prac-<lb/>
and rehearsals at<lb/>
on of the All-State<lb/>
at East Carolina college<lb/>
row, Herbert L. Car-<lb/>
lege faculty, chairman<lb/>
gram committee for the<lb/>
.need.<lb/>
 school of the state<lb/>
: at the clinic by 125<lb/>
musicians. They are<lb/>
to a concert band<lb/>
? ihe colorful uniforms<lb/>
ds, will give a pub-<lb/>
e Wright auditorium<lb/>
I tng.<lb/>
U direct this Clinic Con-<lb/>
distinguished music<lb/>
. : trmerly national pres-<lb/>
. Ma Alpha, music fra-<lb/>
efore going to Colum-<lb/>
 was professor of music<lb/>
?sity of Wisconsin. He<lb/>
f a number of books<lb/>
 music, and his Band<lb/>
ra Training Series" is<lb/>
in educational institu-<lb/>
?ally known festival<lb/>
litest adjudicator in<lb/>
music, he acted as judge<lb/>
in the State Music con-<lb/>
eensboro.<lb/>
of sectional rehearsais<lb/>
 for performers<lb/>
oa instruments of the<lb/>
trice Chauncey, East<lb/>
liege, flutes; Richard<lb/>
.gton, oboes and bas-<lb/>
y Shipman, Kinston, B-<lb/>
ts; Joseph Fields, Chapel<lb/>
nes; James Rodgers.<lb/>
. and Lee Rogers, Smith-<lb/>
?ta and trumpets; George<lb/>
. Rapids, French horns;<lb/>
Sanford, trombones;<lb/>
era, Fayetteville, bari-<lb/>
rt Barnes, Raleigh, bass-<lb/>
1 aiiuway, Elizabeth City,<lb/>
a section; and Harry<lb/>
 Lumberton, bass and alto<lb/>
Directs Band<lb/>
Concerts On Tap<lb/>
Two concerts will be presented<lb/>
during the Eastern division of the<lb/>
All-State Band clinic. Tonight at<lb/>
7:30 tht East Carolina Concert<lb/>
band will play rn the College the-<lb/>
rtwr Tomorrow evening at 8 o<lb/>
clocK me Clinic Concert band,<lb/>
made up of 125 high school mu-<lb/>
sicians from 36 schools in east-<lb/>
ern North Carolina, will give a<lb/>
concert in the Wright auditorium.<lb/>
Norval Church of Columbia uni-<lb/>
East Carolina students and faculty<lb/>
versity will direct the Clinic band,<lb/>
members are invited to attend both<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
Norval Church<lb/>
Notice<lb/>
Students who plan to do student<lb/>
during the academic year<lb/>
1 should file applications not<lb/>
in the close of the registra-<lb/>
;od of the Spring quarter,<lb/>
,T<lb/>
'?).<lb/>
J. L. Oppelt, Director<lb/>
nt leaching and Placement<lb/>
service<lb/>
Banquet Honors<lb/>
Alpha Zeta Frat<lb/>
Monday Evening<lb/>
The Alpha Zeta Chapter of the Na-<lb/>
tional society of Wesley players held<lb/>
its annual Pledge Banquet in Fel-<lb/>
lowship hall of Jarvis Memorial<lb/>
Methodist church Monday night,<lb/>
February 2.<lb/>
The tables were decorated in the<lb/>
Wesley players colors, gold and black,<lb/>
with centerpieces of yellow candles.<lb/>
Elaine Smith, Wilmington, presi-<lb/>
dent of Alpha Zeta chapter, pre-<lb/>
sided at the banquet and introduced<lb/>
Olene Civils, of Clinton, who wel-<lb/>
comed the pledges and guests. As a<lb/>
special feature of the evening, a re-<lb/>
cording was played of one of the<lb/>
programs in the radio series, "The<lb/>
Voice of Lent presented by the<lb/>
chapter over WGTC last year.<lb/>
Mrs. J. H. Rose was a special<lb/>
guest of the chapter at the banquet<lb/>
which was served by Mrs. J. D. Mes-<lb/>
sick, chairman of Student Work for<lb/>
the W iman's society of Christian<lb/>
service of Jarvis Memorial Methodist<lb/>
church, and her commttee was as-<lb/>
ssted by Mrs. George Clapp, local<lb/>
chairman of the WSCS.<lb/>
After the banquet, the group was<lb/>
invited to the Sanctuary where the<lb/>
following were received into the chap-<lb/>
ter as pledges:<lb/>
Marilyn Poole and Pearl May,<lb/>
Durham; Janie Holmes, Whiteville;<lb/>
Sue O'Neill, Windsor; Susanne Shep-<lb/>
herd, Wilmington; Joan Crawford,<lb/>
Rockingham; Milton Mills, Wantha.<lb/>
Initiation will be held later in the<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
Baptist Students<lb/>
Contribute Funds<lb/>
For Scholarship<lb/>
The East Carolina Baptist Student<lb/>
union has set a goal of $120 to be<lb/>
raised by April 1, which will enable<lb/>
students to have the opportunity to<lb/>
help send Walter Fullbrandt to the<lb/>
Seminary in Switzerland.<lb/>
Mr. Fullbrandt of Germany is re-<lb/>
ceiving for the second year a $600<lb/>
scholarship to attend the Baptist<lb/>
Theological seminary in Zurich, Swit-<lb/>
zerland. This scholarship is made<lb/>
ossible from the contributions of<lb/>
Baptist students on all North Caro-<lb/>
lina college campuses. Mr. Fullbrandt<lb/>
is 23 years of age and is a third<lb/>
generation Baptist minister. His fa-<lb/>
ther is a minister at Pforsheim, Ger-<lb/>
many; his grandfather was a minis-<lb/>
ter in Odessa, Russia. When Walter<lb/>
has completed his B.D. degree he<lb/>
,)Ians to return for an active minis-<lb/>
try among his own people in Ger-<lb/>
many.<lb/>
North Carolina BSU'ers are con-<lb/>
tributing another $800 to send a<lb/>
North Carolina Mission volunteer to<lb/>
work in the Hawaiian Islands during<lb/>
tht summer months as an interne<lb/>
under the direction of missionaries<lb/>
already serving there. Part of the<lb/>
goal of $120 will assist with this<lb/>
project.<lb/>
The East Carolina Baptist Student<lb/>
union is also joining with other<lb/>
BSU's in raising several hundred<lb/>
dollars to send Jimmy Ray, state<lb/>
secretary, to the World Youth con-<lb/>
ference in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in<lb/>
July.<lb/>
Commerce Group,<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi Give<lb/>
Valentine Dance<lb/>
An annual Valentine dance, spon-<lb/>
sored by the Commerce club and Pi<lb/>
Omega Pi fraternity at East Carolina<lb/>
college, will be held Friday night,<lb/>
February 13, from 8 til 11:45 in<lb/>
Wright auditorium on the college<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Featuring music by the Collegians,<lb/>
with vocalist Bernie Ham, the yearly<lb/>
?-reject of the two campus organiza-<lb/>
tions is presented with the idea to<lb/>
add color to and liven up the Valen-<lb/>
tine season around East Carolina.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served to<lb/>
everyone at the 6emi-formai affair.<lb/>
General admission will be one dollar<lb/>
whether you come stag or couple,<lb/>
according to Julian Vainrighit, pub-<lb/>
licity chairman.<lb/>
Mitchell Saieed, representing the<lb/>
Commerce clufo, and Carolyn Bur-<lb/>
nette, representing Pi Omega .Pi, are<lb/>
serving as co-chairmen of the dance.<lb/>
Working with the two chairmen of<lb/>
the dance are Betty Sue Branch,<lb/>
chairman of the decorations com-<lb/>
mittee; Grace Baker, head of the<lb/>
refreshments group; and Emil Mas-<lb/>
sad, chairman of entertainment.<lb/>
Other committee heads include<lb/>
Donald McGlohon, door; Jack Ed-<lb/>
wards, clean-up; and Jean McGlohon,<lb/>
figure.<lb/>
Education Department Selects<lb/>
Student Teacher Representatives<lb/>
Student Professors<lb/>
Marine Corps Recruiting Team<lb/>
Invades East Carolina Campus<lb/>
A?? "<lb/>
Students Attend<lb/>
Dance, Concert<lb/>
By Sonny Dunham<lb/>
Valentine Dinner<lb/>
Fetes Baptists,<lb/>
Home Economists<lb/>
OflK<lb/>
I, P.<lb/>
corps Procurement<lb/>
nvade the East Carolina<lb/>
i nesday, according to an<lb/>
meat by Dr. Leo W. Jen-<lb/>
two Marine programs, the Pla-<lb/>
aders class for freshmen,<lb/>
rea and juniors, and the Of-<lb/>
1 andidate course for seniors<lb/>
? : being conducted. Neither<lb/>
requires any drills to be at-<lb/>
nor uniforms to be worn<lb/>
g ne academic year.<lb/>
Platoon Leaders class ("PLC")<lb/>
f two summer training peri-<lb/>
x weeks each prior to grad-<lb/>
from college and then ap-<lb/>
ot to second lieutenant. The<lb/>
for seniors is a ten week<lb/>
at Quantico, Va which con-<lb/>
after graduation.<lb/>
' iy commissioned second lieu-<lb/>
attend a five month Officers<lb/>
course at Quantico before fnr-<lb/>
a signment. Draft deferment is<lb/>
ted to members of both pro-<lb/>
Seniors will be especially in-<lb/>
ked in the fact that flight train-<lb/>
ing is now available after completing<lb/>
M weeks of Officers Basic<lb/>
? The next "OCC" wilt convene<lb/>
March for February graduates and<lb/>
June graduates will report in July-<lb/>
The Procurement team may be<lb/>
contacted either here on campus<lb/>
February 10 or at 1400 Pennsylvania<lb/>
avenue, N.W Washington, D. C.<lb/>
The Marine corps Medical team<lb/>
1 come along to examine any<lb/>
Persons who are interested in joraaig<lb/>
the program.<lb/>
East Carolina college students en-<lb/>
joyed Thursday evening January 29,<lb/>
a concert and dance at which the<lb/>
popular band Sonny Dunham and his<lb/>
Orchestra provided the music. Hosts<lb/>
and hostesses for the event were<lb/>
members of the freshman, sopho-<lb/>
more and senior classes.<lb/>
An hour-long concert, which was<lb/>
attended by approximately 1,200 peo-<lb/>
ple began the evening's entertain-<lb/>
ment in the Wright auditorium Dun-<lb/>
ham, trumpet and trombone stylist,<lb/>
featured singers, and the orchestra<lb/>
gave a program of popular music<lb/>
which won enthusiastic applause<lb/>
from the obviously appreciative au-<lb/>
dience. At the close of the concert<lb/>
dancing was enjoyed by members of<lb/>
college classes and their guests.<lb/>
John Robert Kluttz of Goldsboro,<lb/>
president of the senior class was in<lb/>
Charge of arrangements for the three<lb/>
classes. MM im .J?J Percy<lb/>
Wilkins of Benson, president of the<lb/>
lophomore class; Emil E. Boado of<lb/>
-wTlmington, president of the fresh-<lb/>
man class; and several committees<lb/>
of students.<lb/>
The East Carolina Home Econom-<lb/>
ics club and Baptist Student union<lb/>
will have a joint Valentine dinner<lb/>
Tuesday evening in the North Dining<lb/>
hall on the campus.<lb/>
According to Emily Faircloth,<lb/>
president of the Home Economics<lb/>
club, Mrs. Corrine Grimsley, Family<lb/>
Life Specialist of the North Carolina<lb/>
Extension service, will address the<lb/>
group on "Building Religious Con-<lb/>
victions into Marriage<lb/>
Jack Painter?, president of the<lb/>
BSU, will preside, and a number<lb/>
of home economists and extension<lb/>
workers in Pitt county will be pres-<lb/>
ent.<lb/>
Gwen Williams and M&amp;x-y Agnes<lb/>
Clark, as program chairmen, an-<lb/>
nounce that Dr. Bessie McNeil will<lb/>
open the program with the invoca-<lb/>
tion. Evelyn Eury, in charge of music,<lb/>
says that before the address appro-<lb/>
priate music will fee provided and by<lb/>
Evelyn Eury and a solo.<lb/>
Following the address, Seleta Tuc-<lb/>
ker will sing "Bless This House<lb/>
A few tickets are still available.<lb/>
If interested, you may contact: Mar-<lb/>
celine Aycock, Cotten hall; Delphia<lb/>
Rawls, Flemin; Ramona Outlaw, Jar-<lb/>
vis; Gwen Williams, Wilson or any-<lb/>
one at the Baptist Student center.<lb/>
Newspaper Staff<lb/>
Sponsors Program<lb/>
Of Local Talent<lb/>
A crowd of over 650 persons pack-<lb/>
ed Austin auditorium Tuesday night<lb/>
to witness the talent program spon-<lb/>
sored by the "East Carolinian" staff.<lb/>
The proceeds from the program will<lb/>
help send the newspaper staff to the<lb/>
Columbia Scholastic Press conven-<lb/>
tion, a journalism meeting for college<lb/>
publications in New York City.<lb/>
Master of ceremonies Eli Bloom,<lb/>
Greenville mecrhant. introduced the<lb/>
talent and made some ad lib com-<lb/>
ments on each.<lb/>
The Varsity Men's Glee club op-<lb/>
ened the program with "Praise To<lb/>
Your Name So Fair East Carolina's<lb/>
alma mater, and "Sing On, Brother<lb/>
Others on the program were Hannah<lb/>
Phelps, a tap dancing number; Eno<lb/>
Boado and "Bubba" Mathews, an<lb/>
impersonation act of national and<lb/>
local celebrities; Ann Strughan, a<lb/>
recitation of a Negro spiritual; Larry<lb/>
Williams, the "Charleston assisted<lb/>
hy Andy Meeder at the piano; Gene<lb/>
Lanier, two numbers at the piano;<lb/>
Coon Williams' combo, three "Dixie-<lb/>
land" pieces; Bruce Phillips and Joe<lb/>
Hallow, a minstrel act; Louise Mc-<lb/>
Gowan, a song and a tap dancing<lb/>
number; and Nancy Trifoley, a local<lb/>
-even-year-old girl, sang "Don't Let<lb/>
the Stars Get Into Your Eyes" and<lb/>
other songs.<lb/>
There were no judges for this<lb/>
program; however, each act received<lb/>
a carton of Phillip Morris, which<lb/>
was donated by campus representa-<lb/>
tive Dwight Garrett, and a carton of<lb/>
gum, contributed by the sponsors.<lb/>
Mrs. Ann Osborne Shoe and Rudolph Alexander<lb/>
Annual Of Last Year Merits<lb/>
First Place Award At CSPA<lb/>
The 1952 "Tecoan" rated first place<lb/>
in the Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
association according to a delayed<lb/>
report recently received by the year-<lb/>
ook's editor, Donna Yancey.<lb/>
Last year was the first time that<lb/>
the East Carolina college yearbook<lb/>
has submitted their publication to be<lb/>
judged by CSPA. The annual will be<lb/>
entered again this year for an evalua-<lb/>
tion, but under its new name, "The<lb/>
Buccaneer<lb/>
Most of the comments that the<lb/>
CSPA critics gave were favorable.<lb/>
 . . I like the direct approach<lb/>
and the sincerity of the staff's work<lb/>
AFROTC Graduate<lb/>
Speaks Before Senior<lb/>
Cadet Class Members<lb/>
Lt Stanley T. Smith of Kinston, a<lb/>
1952 graduate of East Carolina col-<lb/>
lege who has been on active duty for<lb/>
six months with the US Air Force,<lb/>
was a visitor on the campus here<lb/>
this week and spoke before senior<lb/>
AFROTC classes at the college.<lb/>
Lt. Smith discussed various phases<lb/>
of active duties with the US Air<lb/>
Force. During his senior year at<lb/>
East Carolina, he was Cadet Colonel<lb/>
in command of the Cadet corps.<lb/>
Lt. Smith is now on leave prior to<lb/>
reporting to flying school. He has<lb/>
been assigned to the Air Force Fly-<lb/>
ing Training school at Marianna, Fla.<lb/>
one critic stated.<lb/>
The comment given on its edi-<lb/>
torial make-up was: "Your copy is<lb/>
simply and clearly written! I have<lb/>
only praise for the good taste and<lb/>
conciseness that your writers have<lb/>
used<lb/>
The photography was "unusually<lb/>
excellent quality<lb/>
The closing comments of the 1952<lb/>
"Tecoan" were:  . . The reader<lb/>
feek the enthusiasm that the staff<lb/>
ut into its work. The book has a<lb/>
warmth, a 'glow Even this reader<lb/>
pined to be young and collegiate<lb/>
again<lb/>
"Congratulations on a most cred-<lb/>
itable piece of work" was written in<lb/>
the margin of the evaluation booklet.<lb/>
Shoe, Alexander Named<lb/>
As 'Mr Miss Student<lb/>
Teacher' For 1952-53<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander of Goldsboro<lb/>
and Mrs. Anne Osborne Shoe of Sal' -<lb/>
bury have been cvosea as Represent-<lb/>
ative Student Teaoiers for the 1952-<lb/>
?53 term at Eat Carolina college.<lb/>
Along with students chosen for<lb/>
-imilar honors in other schools of<lb/>
the state, they will attend the an-<lb/>
nual convention of the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Education association in Ashe-<lb/>
ville in the sipring. There they will<lb/>
be presented to delegate a: the<lb/>
Second General session Friday night,<lb/>
March 27, and will be honor guests<lb/>
at a luncheon given by the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Future Teachers of the<lb/>
N'CDA.<lb/>
Project Continues<lb/>
Tl e project of choosing a man and<lb/>
woman from all North Carolina<lb/>
?oil iges with teach education de-<lb/>
triments and from all high schools<lb/>
with Future Teachers cluf has been<lb/>
?arried out for the past several years.<lb/>
The Department of Future Teachers<lb/>
if the NCEA sponsors the plan.<lb/>
East Carolina's Representative Stu-<lb/>
dent Teach -rs were chosen by a com-<lb/>
mittee of faculty members and of<lb/>
student members of the Robert H.<lb/>
Wright chapter of the Future Teach-<lb/>
ers ?f America and the Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment association. Evaluative cri-<lb/>
teria were qualities of personality,<lb/>
I 1 professional competency, cultural<lb/>
background, scholastic standing and<lb/>
understanding of educational aims.<lb/>
Meet the Profsi<lb/>
Mr. Alexander completed his un-<lb/>
dergraduate work at East Carolina<lb/>
in November, 1952, and is now a<lb/>
trraduate student at the college. While<lb/>
on the campus, he has been presi-<lb/>
dent of the International Relations<lb/>
club, a charter member and first<lb/>
president of the Young Republicans<lb/>
Methodist Group<lb/>
Attends Meeting<lb/>
In Greensboro<lb/>
Woman's College Prof Speaks<lb/>
Here Tomorrow On Legislation<lb/>
Sophomore Class Picks<lb/>
Bedford New Treasurer<lb/>
Charles Bedford was elected treas-<lb/>
urer of the Sophomore class to suc-<lb/>
ceed Ann Bynum at the class assem-<lb/>
bly held last Monday night. Ann<lb/>
recently resigned her position due<lb/>
to the point system which permits a<lb/>
student to hold a limited number of<lb/>
offices on campus.<lb/>
Dr. Lyda Gordon Shivers of the<lb/>
Woman's college of the University<lb/>
of North Carolina, Greensboro, will<lb/>
discuss "What Legislation Has Done<lb/>
for Women" at a meeting Saturday<lb/>
afternoon of this week of the Delta<lb/>
chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma, na-<lb/>
tional honor society for women in<lb/>
education. The talk is scheduled to<lb/>
be given in the Flanagan auditorium<lb/>
at East Carolina college at 2:30<lb/>
o'clock.<lb/>
Members of chapter from Green-<lb/>
ville and other Pitt county towns,<lb/>
Kinston, Tarboro, New Bern, Wash-<lb/>
ington, Williamston and Bayboro and<lb/>
their guests are expected to be pres-<lb/>
ent for the program Saturday. At<lb/>
the close of the meeting Dr. Shivers<lb/>
will be honor guest at a tea given<lb/>
by members of the chapter in the<lb/>
reception rooms of the Flstiagaa<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Dr. Shivers' talk will be one of a<lb/>
series given during the year on the<lb/>
subject of "Educational Legislation:<lb/>
A Means of Enlarging Opportuni-<lb/>
ties Arrangements for Saturday's<lb/>
meeting are being made by a com-<lb/>
mittee headed by Ella Bonner of<lb/>
Washington, program chairman of<lb/>
the Delta chapter.<lb/>
Dr. Shivers, professor of sociology<lb/>
at Woman's college, is a graduate of<lb/>
the University of Mississippi and<lb/>
holds the doctor's degree from the<lb/>
University of North Carolina. She is<lb/>
a member of the Mississippi Bar.<lb/>
Chandler Addresses<lb/>
New Bern Ladies Club<lb/>
Miss Mamiej Chandler, Director of<lb/>
the Methodist Student center, was<lb/>
the guest speaker at the all-day<lb/>
meeting of the woman's society of<lb/>
Christian service, of Centenary<lb/>
Methodist, New Bern, on Monday.<lb/>
Miss Chandler's subject was "The<lb/>
Methodist Deaconess?Old and New<lb/>
She traced briefly the history of the<lb/>
Deaconess order in the Methodist<lb/>
church and told of the program of the<lb/>
Methodist Student center in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
The North Carolina Methodist Stu-<lb/>
dent movement will hold its annual<lb/>
conference at West Market Street<lb/>
church, Greensboro, February 13-15.<lb/>
The Wesley foundation is now- work-<lb/>
ing for a large delegation of Metho-<lb/>
dist students from East Carolina<lb/>
college to attend this conference,<lb/>
which will have representatives from<lb/>
all the colleges in North Carolina,<lb/>
and fraternal delegates from other<lb/>
states.<lb/>
The theme of the conferenc, "The<lb/>
Christian in Community will be<lb/>
presented in three major addresses<lb/>
by the main speaker, Dr. Waldo<lb/>
Beach, Professor of Christian Ethics,<lb/>
The Divinity school of Duke unver-<lb/>
sitju<lb/>
Eight Sub-Con Groups will make<lb/>
practical applications of the theme<lb/>
to particular community issues. A<lb/>
Seminar for Directors and Advisors<lb/>
of local campus groups and for the<lb/>
student secretaries of the Woman's<lb/>
society of Christian service, will be<lb/>
conducted by a representative from<lb/>
the Student Department staff of the<lb/>
General Board of Education.<lb/>
Saturday night there will be a dou-<lb/>
ble feature in the conferenc banquet<lb/>
and the presentation of a new and<lb/>
unpublished Religious Drama by the<lb/>
Wesley players of Duke university.<lb/>
Methodist students of East Caro-<lb/>
lina college are eligible to attend.<lb/>
Information may be obtained from<lb/>
Anne Shoe or from Mamiej Chandler,<lb/>
Director Methodist Student center.<lb/>
A large number have registered and<lb/>
It would be well for those interested<lb/>
to see Mrs. Shoe or Miss Chandler<lb/>
at once.<lb/>
elafe, a member of the college band<lb/>
and the student dramat" - club and<lb/>
a representative on the legislature<lb/>
of the Student (overrunera associa-<lb/>
tion. He plans to continue his edu-<lb/>
cation until he receives a doctorate<lb/>
in the field of social studies.<lb/>
Mrs. Shoe, now a senior at East<lb/>
Carolina, specializes in primary edu-<lb/>
cation. Last year during the spr lg<lb/>
quarter she a-4 her husband Dwig: t<lb/>
Shoe, East urolina football player,<lb/>
headed the YWCA and the YMOA<lb/>
on the campus, respectively. She has<lb/>
served on the Student legislature and<lb/>
the Women's judiciary and holds<lb/>
membership in the Association fcr<lb/>
Childhood L lucatiun aid the WesW<lb/>
foundation, Methodist stadent group.<lb/>
She plans first to become a primary-<lb/>
grade teacher and then to specialize<lb/>
in work in religious education.<lb/>
Both East Carolina Representative<lb/>
Student Teachers are included in the<lb/>
1953 edition of the nationally cir-<lb/>
culated yearbook "Who's Wh 5 Among<lb/>
Students in American Universities<lb/>
and Colleges<lb/>
College Announces<lb/>
High School Day<lb/>
Change Of Date<lb/>
East Carolina college has changed<lb/>
the date of its annual High School<lb/>
day to Friday, March 20, according<lb/>
to an announcement by Dr. Ed. J.<lb/>
Carter, director of the Bureau of<lb/>
Field Services and chairman of the<lb/>
committee in charge of the event.<lb/>
Dr. Carter states that the change<lb/>
was made in order to cooperate with<lb/>
members of Beta clubs of the state<lb/>
who wish to attend the national con-<lb/>
vention of the high school honor<lb/>
society in Asheville April 10, the day<lb/>
first announced for East Carolina<lb/>
High School day. Many students who<lb/>
wish to participate in both events<lb/>
will thus be able to do so.<lb/>
Plans for High School day at East<lb/>
Carolina, the eleventh annual ob-<lb/>
servance of the occasion, are now<lb/>
being completed. Included are educa-<lb/>
tional and '?ecreational events de-<lb/>
signed to show "a college in action<lb/>
A tour of the campus, a musical pro-<lb/>
duction, a pky, a luncheon, a ball<lb/>
game, a tea dance and exhibit hi<lb/>
various departments of instruction<lb/>
are among activities now being ar-<lb/>
ranged for the entertainment of am<lb/>
expected 3,000 or more high school<lb/>
seniors.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00038315_0002"/><lb/>
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6 ft<lb/>
Si<lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
0OP-<lb/>
iA<lb/>
East?arolinian Ye Edited<lb/>
Published Weekly by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
college, Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Name changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1962<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter December 3, 1925 at the<lb/>
U. S. Po?t Office, Greenville, N. C. under the act of<lb/>
March 3, 1879<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teaeaars College Division Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
Association<lb/>
First Place Rating, CSPA Convention, March, 1952<lb/>
Columbia Scholastic Press Association<lb/>
by Tommie Lupton<lb/>
Who's Wko At East Carolina<lb/>
by Phyllia Carpenter<lb/>
"Th? moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb/>
Movea on; Mr all your piety nor wit,<lb/>
?hall lure it back to cancel half a line,<lb/>
Nor all your tears wash out a word of it?E. Fitzgerald<lb/>
EDITORIAL STAFF<lb/>
Temmie Lupton<lb/>
Edwina McMullan<lb/>
 Parker Maddrey<lb/>
Phyllis Carpenter<lb/>
 Kay Johnston,<lb/>
Eaitor-In-Ghief <lb/>
Managing Editor ? <lb/>
Assistant Editor<lb/>
Feature Editor - <lb/>
Staff Assistants<lb/>
Frances Smith, Mildred Henderson, Stuart Arrington,<lb/>
Don Muse, Ann Hogan, Emily Boyce.<lb/>
?diterial Advisor Mary H. Greene<lb/>
Staff Photographer C. L. Perkina Jr.<lb/>
SPORTS STAFF<lb/>
feorto Editor ?  Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Ssorla Assistants  Sam Hux, Bruce Phillips,<lb/>
Jack Scott, Jim Ellis<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
?ustss Manager <lb/>
Assistant Business Manager <lb/>
Our attention was called the other<lb/>
day to an item appearing in Drew<lb/>
Pearson's Washington Merry-Go-<lb/>
Round. Dr. Edward Pruden, who was<lb/>
pastor of the Baptist church in Wash-<lb/>
ington, D. C, which President Tru-<lb/>
man attended, will deliver a closing<lb/>
prayer at a meeting of senators and<lb/>
congressmen in Washington. The rea-<lb/>
son that we thought the item might<lb/>
be of interest to our readers is that<lb/>
Dr. Pruden wasfc on our campus for<lb/>
Religious Emphasis week, and he be-<lb/>
came acquainted with many of us.<lb/>
There was a statement on the front<lb/>
page of last week's "East Carolinian"<lb/>
which said that the Alpha Phi Ome-<lb/>
jra was the first non-professional<lb/>
fraternity at East Carolina. Bob<lb/>
Hughes, member of the Sig na Rho<lb/>
Phi, dropped in to correct this state-<lb/>
ment. He stated that the Sigma Rho<lb/>
Phi was a non-professional fraternity.<lb/>
We believe that we are correct in<lb/>
saying that the Phi Sigma Pi, honor-<lb/>
ary service fraternity for man, is<lb/>
the oldest such group on campus.<lb/>
Edna Massad<lb/>
Faye Jones<lb/>
Business Assistants - Peggy Joyce Bowea,<lb/>
Mary Gillette, Marty MacArthur, Atwood Smith,<lb/>
Dwight Garrett<lb/>
liehange Editor Mrs. Susie Webb<lb/>
Campus Circulation Shirley Brown Manning<lb/>
Idea For Amusement<lb/>
A skating rink on the campus? Yes, this can<lb/>
be possible, if enough students are interested<lb/>
and if the Administration approves.<lb/>
A member of the faculty was in the office<lb/>
last week and suggested that a skating rink could<lb/>
easily be installed in the Wright auditorium.<lb/>
There is a certain type of roller skates with hard<lb/>
rubber wheels that will not damage the floor, he<lb/>
stated. If the college financed the project, they<lb/>
could be refunded by a small fee from the stu-<lb/>
dents. This faculty member also looked into the<lb/>
future. "Eventually, skating could be added to<lb/>
the physical education courses<lb/>
"Skating said the professor, "is second to<lb/>
swimming in exercising the body, in my opinion.<lb/>
It is one of the most graceful recreations<lb/>
We believe that a skating rink would also<lb/>
add more entertainment on the campus. If this<lb/>
program is carried out, more students would<lb/>
?pend the week end here rather than at home.<lb/>
We have suggested the idea of a skating<lb/>
rink to the SGA, and we feel quite confident that<lb/>
they will give it serious consideration and careful<lb/>
investigation.<lb/>
Having talked with quite a few students<lb/>
and faculty, we find that they favor this idea with<lb/>
great enthusiasm. Some have said that it would<lb/>
add to the variety of recreation and because it is<lb/>
enjoyable to watch, it would make "good enter-<lb/>
tainment and amusement to the college<lb/>
We sincerely hope that the Administration<lb/>
will find the idea a worthwhile project and will<lb/>
not have difficulties in making it possible. We<lb/>
realize that the Administration is busy with<lb/>
other duties and building projects at the present,<lb/>
but we would like them to consider our sugges-<lb/>
tion in the near future. TPM<lb/>
Big Banking- Business<lb/>
Each week the Student Budget office at East<lb/>
Carolina handles over $4,000 in cash transac-<lb/>
tions. Taking into account that the Budget office<lb/>
is open only two hours a day for five days each<lb/>
week, one can readily see that when the office<lb/>
is open the cashiers have to work.<lb/>
Most of the business carried on by the Budg-<lb/>
et office is the cashing of students' checks. The<lb/>
percentage of checks which are bad is low; how-<lb/>
ever, each week there is a certain number of<lb/>
checks which "bounce" for various reasons.<lb/>
Sometimes the reason for the checks "bounc-<lb/>
ing" is that the bank does not recognize the sig-<lb/>
nature on the check as being proper. Forgetting<lb/>
to put the name of the right bank on the check<lb/>
accounts for some of the misdemeanors, but the<lb/>
larger portion of j,he checks which are turned<lb/>
down by the banks are stamped "insufficient<lb/>
funds<lb/>
Though, as we stated before, the percentage<lb/>
of bad checks is very low, we feel that it could<lb/>
be even lower if the checkwriters were more<lb/>
careful about filling in the checks and checking<lb/>
to see that there are sufficient funds backing<lb/>
the withdrawals<lb/>
After taking all factors into account, we<lb/>
feel that we do not have any serious problem<lb/>
with persons' checks not being honored.<lb/>
SMOKE CLOUDS AT SMITH<lb/>
The Sophian, Smith college (Mass.) stu-<lb/>
dent newspaper, has launched a crusade for more<lb/>
smoking privileges on campus, and supports a<lb/>
suggestion "for smoking downstairs in college<lb/>
houses until midnight. . . "<lb/>
"Frequently study habits depend on an oc-<lb/>
casional cigarette says the Sophian . . . We<lb/>
think that a convenient place to study would<lb/>
create an atmosphere conducive to learning<lb/>
In an ACP Student Opinion poll last year<lb/>
it was learned that students are against smoking<lb/>
in the classroom by about two to one, with more<lb/>
women disapproving than men.<lb/>
Comments concerning the Sonny<lb/>
Dunham dance were quite favorable,<lb/>
and the night's program cost only<lb/>
$700. All will agree that the group<lb/>
was not as colorful as Ray Antho?y;<lb/>
however, we feel that most everyone<lb/>
was well pleased with the first an-<lb/>
nual Class dance.<lb/>
Our own Bernie Ham really made<lb/>
a hit with members of the Dunham<lb/>
orchestra, and we heard that Ham<lb/>
was even offered a contract.<lb/>
Beginning this week each person<lb/>
featured in the "Who's, Who at East<lb/>
Carolina" column will be given a<lb/>
carton of Phillip Morris cigarettes<lb/>
by Dwight Garrett, who has recently<lb/>
been reappointed campus representa-<lb/>
tive at East Carolina by Phillip<lb/>
Morris.<lb/>
"Who's Who" is usually a member<lb/>
of the Senior class; but this week<lb/>
we have an exception, for Rudolph<lb/>
Alexander of Goldsboro graduated<lb/>
from East Carolina college at the<lb/>
conclusion of Fall quarter 1952 with<lb/>
a social studies major and an Eng-<lb/>
lish minor. He is now a full time<lb/>
graduate student end plans to com-<lb/>
plete his master's degree in August.<lb/>
Rudolph came to DOC Winter quar-<lb/>
ter of 1949 a-nd attended all regular<lb/>
school quarters and two and one half<lb/>
summer terms; therefore, he com-<lb/>
pleted his B.S. degree in a little more<lb/>
than three years. This Dean's list<lb/>
student has found time for many<lb/>
other activities other than curricular.<lb/>
Active Club Member<lb/>
He is very active in several of the<lb/>
prominent clubs on campus. This<lb/>
graduate has been a member of the<lb/>
International Relations club for four<lb/>
years. In 1951 he was a delegate to<lb/>
the regional conference at Lincoln<lb/>
Memorial university in Harrigot,<lb/>
Tenn and a delegate to the state<lb/>
conference in 1952. His senior year<lb/>
he served as president of the club.<lb/>
Rudolph was a member of the college<lb/>
band his sophomore and junior years<lb/>
and business manager of the Teach-<lb/>
er's playhouse production "You Can't<lb/>
Take It With You" his junior year.<lb/>
When a senior, he was a member<lb/>
of the Student legislature and chair-<lb/>
man of the college sign committee.<lb/>
Also he received the honor of being<lb/>
chosen as "Who's Whc in American<lb/>
Universities and Colleges His most<lb/>
treasured award, though, was receiv-<lb/>
ing the student teaching award, "Mr.<lb/>
Representative Student Teacher of<lb/>
1952 and 1953<lb/>
The Young Republicans club, which<lb/>
TIMELY TOPICS<lb/>
By Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
The faculty at Wheaton college,<lb/>
111. has turned down a student coun-<lb/>
cil proposal which would permit un-<lb/>
limited class cuts. The vote was close.<lb/>
Supporters of the plan felt unlimited<lb/>
cuts would give students a healthier<lb/>
attitude tow-ard classes; they cited<lb/>
statistics indicating good attendance<lb/>
records at schools having unlimited<lb/>
cuts.<lb/>
But the opposition declared that<lb/>
all this was "more theoretical than<lb/>
anything else The plan, according<lb/>
to the dean, will not 'be discussed<lb/>
again this year.<lb/>
We know just what the people at<lb/>
Wheaton are going through, for we<lb/>
served on the committee at East<lb/>
Carolina last year that worked up<lb/>
the present cut system. There were<lb/>
many different plans discussed, and<lb/>
the unlimited class cuts plan was<lb/>
one of them.<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander<lb/>
secretary, chairman of arrangements<lb/>
for the campus mock presidential<lb/>
preferential primary sponsored by the<lb/>
YDC and YRC and was also active<lb/>
on campus and in his home commu-<lb/>
nity in the presidential campaign.<lb/>
Here we might say that he said that<lb/>
he was quite pleased with the results<lb/>
of the election in November. Last,<lb/>
but not least, Rudolph was chairman<lb/>
of the college delegation to the State<lb/>
convention in Winston-Salem. This<lb/>
he described as "quite an experience<lb/>
Receives Charter<lb/>
Harold Stassen was the main<lb/>
speaker and several thousand people<lb/>
and delegates were in attendance for<lb/>
the principle address. In the presence<lb/>
of this convention Rudolph was pre-<lb/>
sented the official charter for the<lb/>
was organized Rudolph's sophomore East Carolina college Republican<lb/>
year, elected him their first presi- club by President William E. Stevens<lb/>
dent. As a senior he was assistant Jr. of the State Young Republicans.<lb/>
, is definitely a sport fan<lb/>
even though he played none in col-<lb/>
lege other than those offered in the<lb/>
?physical education department. V hen<lb/>
he was asked what team was his fa-<lb/>
vorite in football and basketball, he<lb/>
immediately replied, "The ???;<lb/>
course Then we said what others<lb/>
than the .Pirates, U which he an-<lb/>
swered, "You mean there are other<lb/>
Learns?" This is proof enough of his<lb/>
loyalty to our teams.<lb/>
He aLso made the statement that<lb/>
manv Earf Carolina students seem<lb/>
0 Tee upon and that is, "I think<lb/>
that this is the most upcoming school<lb/>
in the state, and the years are num-<lb/>
red when members of the Southern<lb/>
inference will have to 'move over'<lb/>
and give us a place Much of his<lb/>
pare time is epeot beside a radio<lb/>
listening to the sports broadcasts<lb/>
or sitting with a good book, not fic-<lb/>
tion, however, for he likes only his-<lb/>
torical articles and novels.<lb/>
Holds Down Job<lb/>
Not only is Rudolph busy with his<lb/>
studies and outside activities, but<lb/>
he has a steady job with J. C. Penny<lb/>
company here in Greenville, and has<lb/>
been employed with them since his<lb/>
freshman year in college. His job as<lb/>
display man gives the boys at college<lb/>
something to "kid" him about, for<lb/>
much of his time is spent decorating<lb/>
the windows. They will come by and<lb/>
tease him about being a monkey in a<lb/>
cage and then try to feed him pea-<lb/>
nuts. "Once he said, "the window<lb/>
had a display of ladies lingerie and<lb/>
the wife of a lawyer came in and<lb/>
requested that we change the window<lb/>
immediately, so you see, there's nev-<lb/>
er a dull moment<lb/>
Rudolph is married to the former<lb/>
Miss Frances Baker of Aurora. She<lb/>
is a student here at East Carolina,<lb/>
majoring in business.<lb/>
It is the custom each year to bold a Nat<lb/>
Student Congress at some leading<lb/>
versity in the United States. This<lb/>
made up of students from all over the con,<lb/>
meets and discusses pertinent pr<lb/>
national and academic nature<lb/>
discussed at the most recent cong<lb/>
Fair Employment Practices A . mic jn<lb/>
dom, the international situation a ?dom f<lb/>
the college press.<lb/>
As was vxpected the N o rt - .<lb/>
delegates split in regard to FEP( altb lgw<lb/>
Southern delegates admitted t<lb/>
eral than the "folks back home 1 <lb/>
finally went on reo rd a favoring I Jr<lb/>
city and state levels, with a voluntary i<lb/>
on the Federal statute books.<lb/>
In regard to academic fr -<lb/>
gations the Congress favon<lb/>
sentatives placed on in ; <lb/>
American Association of I in<lb/>
It was also decided that the ?<lb/>
accept a "unity" meeting in 1: .<lb/>
Sponsored by the International l'?.<lb/>
?a communist organization .<lb/>
in Prague.<lb/>
With regard to the stud.<lb/>
gress reaffirmed its previ .<lb/>
freedom of the collegiate <lb/>
the press should be unhampered<lb/>
ministrations and faculties, but<lb/>
governments.<lb/>
You Must Overcome Shyness<lb/>
Dear La Rue and A-ndre,<lb/>
I'm a sophomore at BCC and would<lb/>
like to know the kind of methods<lb/>
you would advise to use on a certain<lb/>
male to overcome his shyness.<lb/>
This boy does not appear too shy,<lb/>
because he always talks to me and<lb/>
even (if I may be forward enough<lb/>
to say) "flirts" with me. He'll do<lb/>
everything towards asking me for a<lb/>
date, except ask me for a date. I've<lb/>
had so many letdowns after talking<lb/>
with Kim, that I've begun to feel<lb/>
somewhat like a deflated tire!<lb/>
I must have advice soon.<lb/>
Miss "Firestone" 1953<lb/>
Dear "Miss Firestone<lb/>
Your problem is one we've dealt<lb/>
with at many French colleges. Of<lb/>
course we can't advise you to use<lb/>
any of our French methods?your I<lb/>
customs in America are so different?<lb/>
but we'll do our best to help you.<lb/>
If you have any classes with this<lb/>
boy, why don't you ask him to study<lb/>
with you some night. (Be sure to act<lb/>
very dumib, for a male always likes<lb/>
to feel superior.)<lb/>
If you aren't fortunate enough to<lb/>
have any classes with this shy male,<lb/>
we'll have to cope with the problem<lb/>
differently.<lb/>
If he excels in any sport (pref-<lb/>
erably ping pong) why don't you<lb/>
challenge him to a game? (Again be<lb/>
sure to let him beat you.)<lb/>
If none of these solutions work,<lb/>
let us know and we'll give you a few<lb/>
"French" tips. They always work<lb/>
when everything else fails.<lb/>
La Rue and Andre<lb/>
Shooting<lb/>
The Bull<lb/>
From Cornell university:<lb/>
College students are meetini<lb/>
a minimum of protest and i<lb/>
according to a oll taken on 11<lb/>
nell university. The poll compan<lb/>
nerable student with the incom<lb/>
He meets his obligation but ?:<lb/>
like it. Ninety per cent of the I<lb/>
report, would return to college If<lb/>
they finished, and only one in I<lb/>
tary service would be a map r di<lb/>
life. Most students seem to be tak<lb/>
ment status seriously and are<lb/>
maintaining good grades: but 11<lb/>
who felt they wanted to get in as<lb/>
possible before being drafted.<lb/>
The report concludes that<lb/>
ment drop the student deferment<lb/>
supplying a substitute, there is littl<lb/>
restlessness and anxiety would re1 <lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Cheerer, Player Become Couple<lb/>
Whde most coMege papers seem to<lb/>
be tightening their belts in efforts<lb/>
to meet one financial crisis after<lb/>
another, the Connecticut Campus,<lb/>
University of Connecticut, has just<lb/>
announced its switch-over from a<lb/>
three-times-a-week to a daily.<lb/>
"The new publishing schedule<lb/>
says the Campus, "will mark the<lb/>
culmination of a long-time dream<lb/>
But the Campus didn't forget to call<lb/>
on the administration for a "re-eval-<lb/>
uation of the University's arbitrary<lb/>
distribution of the student activities<lb/>
fee<lb/>
A week before (January 7), the<lb/>
Eastern State News, a weekly at<lb/>
Eastern Illinois State college, began<lb/>
publishing its "diminutive economy<lb/>
size issue a four-column affair.<lb/>
Students were warned "to expect<lb/>
similar issues as the result of a re-<lb/>
duced publications budget Like the<lb/>
Campus, the Eastern State News<lb/>
gets most of its money from a stu-<lb/>
dent activity fee.<lb/>
And the Silver and Gold, University<lb/>
of Colorado, has assured its readers<lb/>
that it will continue to be a daily,<lb/>
but told them not to be surprised if<lb/>
most of its issues were only four<lb/>
pages.<lb/>
The "East Carolinian" weekly is<lb/>
puf. lished on student funds, but we<lb/>
have been fortunate enough to have<lb/>
enough to follow our regular sched-<lb/>
ule. We would not like to have to<lb/>
print a smaller paper, but if we did<lb/>
not have the money we would have<lb/>
to.<lb/>
by Kay Johnston<lb/>
Ann Siler, our head cheerleader,<lb/>
and Dick Cherry, one of our star<lb/>
football players, have made the spot-<lb/>
light again. But this time the spot-<lb/>
light is not in the athletic field but<lb/>
more or less in the romantic field,<lb/>
for this week Ann and Dick have<lb/>
been chosen as the "Couple of the<lb/>
Week<lb/>
Ann said that she owes her thanks<lb/>
for her introduction to Dick, to her<lb/>
brother Sandy Siler, for, quote Ann,<lb/>
"Dick saw me in the dindng room one<lb/>
night and said to one of his friends,<lb/>
'Say, that girl looks like Sandy Siler.<lb/>
Do you guess that's his sister?' "<lb/>
Well you can take it from there, they<lb/>
by T. Parker Maddrey<lb/>
There have been quite a few girls<lb/>
who have been complaining about<lb/>
the "United Stag association" here<lb/>
on the campus. This union, as one<lb/>
girl expressed it, "is a group of boys<lb/>
who insist upon going 'stag' to the<lb/>
college dances. Their technique on<lb/>
the dance floor reminds you of cats<lb/>
preying on little mice<lb/>
She paused to demonstrate a cat's<lb/>
movements and continued: "When a<lb/>
large percentage of the boys go 'stag'<lb/>
to a dance, it works a hardship on<lb/>
us girls. We have two choices. One<lb/>
is to deny our privilege of student<lb/>
activity by staying in the dorm while<lb/>
others are enjoying themselves. The<lb/>
POT POURRI<lb/>
by Entity Boyce<lb/>
A religious publication r<lb/>
that people nowadays have a "die.<lb/>
It went on to say: "The public mind<lb/>
a dictionary like a bad lobster in<lb/>
Reading, like traveling, can acqua with<lb/>
entirely new vocabularies. Yet the i reading j<lb/>
of today with its strong emotfl n il<lb/>
thetizes thinking so the reader<lb/>
not need to look up a word in tl<lb/>
Some people, regardless of what th ? ??<lb/>
will never go to the dictionary. I phobia<lb/>
is part of the mental breakdown<lb/>
But a few girls in Fuming na<lb/>
that not everybody has the dreaded dicti nary-<lb/>
phobia. For the past few weeks these enter rising<lb/>
lassies have learned a new word ever; day. Not<lb/>
through the first of the A's yet. they still<lb/>
high hopes of complete vocabulary expans<lb/>
other choice is to go 'stag ourselves j and S0Qn they ntend continue tv<lb/>
and, being bound by the rules of wjth two words a day. The fact that the<lb/>
were introduced, and they both have etiquette, we decorate the walls at<lb/>
a dance<lb/>
seemed pretty well pleased with the<lb/>
introductions.<lb/>
Ann is from Siler City (now that<lb/>
sounds reasonable) and Dick is from<lb/>
Washington, N. C.<lb/>
Since English is Ann's major, and<lb/>
Dick's most difficult subject, they<lb/>
never have much trouble passing the<lb/>
time. Of course they don't study all<lb/>
the time, not English anyway!<lb/>
Even though Ann and Dick are<lb/>
jroing steady, they have no immediate<lb/>
plans for the future, but whatever<lb/>
they are, we wish you both much<lb/>
luck.<lb/>
Brains<lb/>
Would you like to be smart?<lb/>
Well, being smart is no fun.<lb/>
If you use your brains?your're show-<lb/>
ing off.<lb/>
If you don't?you have none.<lb/>
The Sphian took a survey of 16 colleges, But that's not the thing that irks me.<lb/>
?imilar to Smith, and found that only one?Mills<lb/>
coilegre, Calif permits smoking in the classroom<lb/>
But Mills girls are not allowed to smoke while<lb/>
walking on campus.<lb/>
Whenever they have a task to do<lb/>
They never hesitate to aee.<lb/>
If you will help them. Ae yon a<lb/>
sucker,?too?<lb/>
Worthat's not a fast player, but there's a great pieee of deception<lb/>
in the way he can swallow air<lb/>
It is not pleasant, we agree, to be<lb/>
confined lo a room with nothing to<lb/>
do but meurn the death of a chance<lb/>
to participate in an activity with<lb/>
others. Nor is it fun to be a "wall<lb/>
flower<lb/>
In defense for the girls, we feel<lb/>
that there is no reason for the USA<lb/>
boys (United Stag association) to<lb/>
pass up a date to go "stag Finan-<lb/>
cial difficulty is no excuse. These<lb/>
dances, such as the class dance held<lb/>
Thursday night, have previously been<lb/>
paid for by all students and 90 there<lb/>
is no admission charge at the door.<lb/>
They can't say that there are no<lb/>
girls to date when there are nine<lb/>
feanales for every eight males here<lb/>
on the campus. Some boys gripe:<lb/>
"I can't get a date but the girls<lb/>
retaliate with: "You never ask<lb/>
To a boy, it is advantageous to<lb/>
ask a girl to a dance. Even if she<lb/>
cannot accept, she will feel highly<lb/>
complimented and will, more .aan<lb/>
likely, give him first choice the next<lb/>
time.<lb/>
In the future, we suggest to these<lb/>
girls to make an amendment to Emi-<lb/>
ly Post's constitution stating:  . .<lb/>
On certain occasions it is permissible<lb/>
for the woman to ask the man to<lb/>
dance and-or may at any time 'break'<lb/>
on her lady friend who is dancing<lb/>
with the man that she desires<lb/>
Another suggestion is to promote<lb/>
a "Girl-Ask-Boy Week" which would<lb/>
seem like a lay-over from leap year.<lb/>
This program would surprise the boys<lb/>
so much that they will forget their<lb/>
bashful, shy ways and the girls would<lb/>
not have any more difficulty about<lb/>
dating for the next ten weeks at<lb/>
least.<lb/>
The only suggestion we have for<lb/>
the "United Stag association" is to<lb/>
disfcand and ask a girl to the next<lb/>
dance. And another thing, she would<lb/>
appreciate it more if you asked a<lb/>
little in advance.<lb/>
met so many new words in their reading prom<lb/>
ed them to continue using the dictionary<lb/>
valuable friend rather than an e n e m y<lb/>
shunned. When asked what prompted one girl,<lb/>
she answered: "Well, when I had a<lb/>
course under Dr. Toll last quarter. 1 realized<lb/>
vocabulary limitations. I decided to do sometl<lb/>
about it. This way I am actually learning 1<lb/>
words by using them, and it's fun. I Anot<lb/>
girl of the band said that she and her dictioi<lb/>
became such close companions while takng an-<lb/>
cient history that she just couldn't pal <lb/>
We say best of luck to you girls who<lb/>
the few who don't have "dictionary<lb/>
 ? <lb/>
One of the newer books in the library ?<lb/>
"You Must Relax" by Dr. Edmund Jacobson. He<lb/>
has written a practical method of reducing tne<lb/>
strains of modern living. Relaxation, the rest-<lb/>
method developed scientifically was<lb/>
sented by Dr. Jacobson at Harvard university is<lb/>
1908. J<lb/>
Since then he has devoted to it much otm<lb/>
time, energies and personal means. He has <lb/>
ten about it extensively in medical and other scien-<lb/>
tific journals. "You Must Relax written for tne<lb/>
layman, became a best seller when first Publisfi,<lb/>
In consequence of his efforts, relaxation no<lb/>
means nerve-rest in common speech. A<lb/>
Such chapters as Tense Persons. The yje.<lb/>
for Sleep, Relaxing the Nerves and Quieting 1<lb/>
Nerves, help make the book a storehouse<lb/>
practical knowledge. 1(<lb/>
Although the average college student cow<lb/>
not be described as a bundle of nerves, we bellJ<lb/>
this book will make us understand ourselves a<lb/>
our mechanics much better.<lb/>
? ? <lb/>
As George Bernard Shaw said, "If the other<lb/>
planets are inhabited, they must be using <lb/>
earth as their insane asylum.<lb/>
WINTER BLUNDERLAND<lb/>
Fraternity and- dormitory men at No ,<lb/>
western university staged a series of spontar<lb/>
snowball fights two weeks ago. When the tun<lb/>
over, about 200 windows were broken.<lb/>
The dean of men says repairs will be<lb/>
for by everyone concerned. Meanwhile, wu<lb/>
many as 64 windows out in one house, mem<lb/>
are enjoying the fresh winter air.<lb/>
s<lb/>
V<lb/>
tb?<lb/>
?U'? I<lb/>
?<lb/>
jnciu<lb/>
pur"1<lb/>
couW <lb/>
?ltt ?<lb/>
tMt "<lb/>
.ill <lb/>
.0 <lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
j<lb/>
:y R<lb/>
11 point<lb/>
Rf<lb/>
manship<lb/>
SCO'<lb/>
<pb facs="00038315_0003"/><lb/>
1861 HfRIdaY' February ? 1953<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAH<lb/>
PAGE TEREX<lb/>
cs<lb/>
atiotm<lb/>
uyKe n<lb/>
thToentH<lb/>
L c?Utttry<lb/>
'lth?ugh tiJ<lb/>
lrvesti.<lb/>
rePre.<lb/>
nd<lb/>
its<lb/>
2 ? the<lb/>
Wi not<lb/>
hich j,<lb/>
Merits<lb/>
carters<lb/>
 Con.<lb/>
filing for<lb/>
added that<lb/>
? by ad-<lb/>
- -dent<lb/>
isiasn<lb/>
I Cor-<lb/>
? the<lb/>
d before<lb/>
?"ht mili-<lb/>
!tion in ;<lb/>
?uch fun h<lb/>
govern-<lb/>
without<lb/>
1to the<lb/>
?iec!ared<lb/>
-phobia<lb/>
y avoids<lb/>
rk ellar.<lb/>
I me with<lb/>
riding<lb/>
act anes-<lb/>
he does<lb/>
! dictionary.<lb/>
readi. ?<lb/>
'nary-phobia<lb/>
lave proved<lb/>
dictionary-<lb/>
nterprising<lb/>
?v day. Not<lb/>
?ill have<lb/>
expansion,<lb/>
their studies<lb/>
t these irls<lb/>
ling prompt-<lb/>
:inary as a<lb/>
t- m y to be<lb/>
led one fpA<lb/>
a sociology<lb/>
realized my<lb/>
io something<lb/>
Earning ne<lb/>
I Another<lb/>
lr dictionary<lb/>
e takng an-<lb/>
3art with A<lb/>
are some ?<lb/>
Iphobia<lb/>
library<lb/>
tcobson. ije<lb/>
ducing the<lb/>
, the rest-<lb/>
'first pre-<lb/>
miversity i?<lb/>
much of f<lb/>
le has writ-<lb/>
, other scien-<lb/>
itten for&amp;<lb/>
ucation n?<lb/>
The Quest<lb/>
 YOUo<lb/>
could<lb/>
urselves<lb/>
and<lb/>
'If the<lb/>
usintf<lb/>
thef<lb/>
this<lb/>
thefuJI<lb/>
SPORTS ECHO<lb/>
by Bob HiUdrup<lb/>
l.a-<lb/>
wt-k this column advocated test, he went to the Pirat<lb/>
m<lb/>
ease be obtained for the<lb/>
the new Memorial gymna-<lb/>
 , we would like to offer<lb/>
that Warren "Sonny"<lb/>
uniform be the first item<lb/>
ided in this case.<lb/>
Daring four years of basketball<lb/>
I ,v at 1 asl Carolina Russell has<lb/>
! mmself as a true ath-<lb/>
immortal. This entire column<lb/>
well be devoted to Russell's<lb/>
athletic achievements and still the<lb/>
i would not be adequately cov-<lb/>
frtHi Let it suffice, then, to state<lb/>
v firmly believe that never<lb/>
mil East (arolina be able to find<lb/>
. hardwood athlete who can surpass<lb/>
Russell, and as a small tribute<lb/>
s outstanding performer and<lb/>
ri-hip we feel that his "No.<lb/>
j should be retired.<lb/>
fame with Western Carolina<lb/>
ay was basketball at its<lb/>
 The Catamounts came<lb/>
ermined to repeat their<lb/>
season victory over the<lb/>
f r a time it appeared<lb/>
?v might well accomplish<lb/>
in. The men from Cullo-<lb/>
? with them All-Ameri-<lb/>
I Rodgers ami, despite much<lb/>
the contrary, we feel that<lb/>
: on an outstanding show.<lb/>
?v, who scored 36 points<lb/>
revions catamount-Pirate<lb/>
k on the job of guarding<lb/>
II, but it just wasn't<lb/>
night. Although we feel in<lb/>
is that Russell is definitely<lb/>
 of the two, Rodgers is<lb/>
b great ball player and an<lb/>
ng sportsman.<lb/>
s who came to the game<lb/>
see a high scoring total<lb/>
: rs were disappointed in his<lb/>
output. We'd like to point<lb/>
ver, that Rodgers attempt-<lb/>
B few goals from the floor<lb/>
the remainder of the game.<lb/>
Rodgera showed his true sports-<lb/>
hip hen, at the end of the con-<lb/>
e bench<lb/>
and personally congratulated East<lb/>
Carolina Coach Howard Porter and<lb/>
Sonny Russell. Western Carolina<lb/>
may well be proud of Ronald Rodgers.<lb/>
Another heartening item of sports-<lb/>
manship occurred when Jordan, Cata-<lb/>
mount center, fouled out of the game.<lb/>
The entire Pirate five had a friendly<lb/>
word for him as he left the floor.<lb/>
It is these items, as well as the<lb/>
rough and tumble play, that should<lb/>
be part of any athletic contest.<lb/>
Catamounts Bow To Pirates, 86-67<lb/>
T iree Tame Catamounts<lb/>
SCOTT'S CLEANERS<lb/>
Athlete<lb/>
Of The Week<lb/>
by Jack Scott<lb/>
Charlie Huffman, hook shot artist<lb/>
from Thomasville, was selected this<lb/>
issue's "Athlete of the Week" after<lb/>
three brilliant performances last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
In helping the Bucs rack up three<lb/>
important victories, Huffman scored<lb/>
a total of 61 points or an average<lb/>
of 20.3 per game. Besides his scoring<lb/>
ability, Charlie is an excellent defen-<lb/>
sive man as he uses his 6' 3" frame<lb/>
to great advantage and breaks up<lb/>
many of the opponent's passes.<lb/>
Huffman, now a junior, came to<lb/>
East Carolina in 1950 and broke into<lb/>
Howard Porter's squad with a start-<lb/>
ing forward position. As a freshman,<lb/>
he scored 342 points in 26 games for<lb/>
a 13.5 average, second best on the<lb/>
squad. Last year Charlie was a vic-<lb/>
tim of the "sophomore jinx" and<lb/>
spesst most of the season on the<lb/>
bench. This season he is "playing the<lb/>
best ball he has ever played" as<lb/>
Coach Porter puts it. In 13 games<lb/>
he has dropped in 177 points. His<lb/>
highest total came against AiCC last<lb/>
Friday night when he scored 22<lb/>
points to grab top scoring honors.<lb/>
Recognized as the most conscien-<lb/>
tious basketball player on the team,<lb/>
Huffman has regular sleeping hours,<lb/>
studies on road trips and obeys train-<lb/>
ing rules to the word.<lb/>
A graduate of Thomasville high<lb/>
school, he starred in basketball, foot-<lb/>
lall and tennis, lettering in each<lb/>
sport for three years. During his<lb/>
Sonny Russell. East Carolina's All-State forward, is shown surrounded<lb/>
by Western Carolina Catamounts. Russell scored 32 points during the even-<lb/>
ing and paced the Pirates to a 86-67 win.<lb/>
McCrary's Eagles Play Here<lb/>
One of the top independent basket- top cage stars. Little is known con-<lb/>
ball teams in the South will be in I cerning the team from Asheboro but<lb/>
Memorial gym tomorrow night when j in two contests between the cluibs<lb/>
McCrary's Eagles meet the East Car-<lb/>
olina college Pirates.<lb/>
The Eagles yearly play top grade<lb/>
college and independent teams in<lb/>
North Carolina and boast a squad<lb/>
comprised of many of the nation's<lb/>
junior and senior years, Huffman<lb/>
made All-tournament forward in the<lb/>
South Piedmont conference. More<lb/>
honors came his way his senior prep<lb/>
year when he co-captained his foot-<lb/>
ball team and was selected as an<lb/>
All-conference tackle.<lb/>
last year the Pirates were able to<lb/>
(merge victorious but once.<lb/>
The game will be the final out-of-<lb/>
conference for the locals this season.<lb/>
They have met only one other non-<lb/>
conference club this season.<lb/>
Following the McCrary game the<lb/>
Pirates will have a week of rest and<lb/>
then will engage Elon's Christians<lb/>
in a game here February 14 that<lb/>
may well have a definite bearing on<lb/>
the final conference standings. The<lb/>
locals bested Tlon in an earlier game<lb/>
at Burlington, 76-75.<lb/>
Huffman Scores<lb/>
22 As Buccaneers<lb/>
Defeat Bulldogs<lb/>
by Sam Hux<lb/>
Stepping out from the shadow of<lb/>
Russell and Hodges, big Charlie<lb/>
Huffman led his East Carolina Pirate<lb/>
mates to a stirring 92-59 victory over<lb/>
Atlantic Christian cillege here Fri-<lb/>
day night, to bring the Bohunk Tro-<lb/>
phy back home.<lb/>
The six-four forward from Thomas-<lb/>
ville broke loose with every shot in<lb/>
he book to rack up 22 points, his<lb/>
ighest mark of the year.<lb/>
Sonny Russell and Bobby Hodges,<lb/>
t-ually high scorers, followed Huff-<lb/>
nan in the point column. "Mr. Bas-<lb/>
ketball" pushed through 19 points<lb/>
while Hodges was good for 15.<lb/>
Bill Price and Eddie Johnson were<lb/>
he ACC pace setters as they tied at<lb/>
13 markers apiece. Olose behind was<lb/>
Jimimie Peebles with 10.<lb/>
There was never any doubt as to<lb/>
the victor as the Bucs built up an<lb/>
early lead and held a 48-31 lead at<lb/>
intermission.<lb/>
Coach Howard Porter cleared his<lb/>
trench as the subs played almost half<lb/>
the contest.<lb/>
Atlantic Christian (59) fg ft pf tp<lb/>
Byram, f  2 2 5 6<lb/>
Williams, f  0 5 3 5<lb/>
Ham, f  0<lb/>
Ingraham, f-c  2<lb/>
Price, f 3<lb/>
Peebles, c ? 3<lb/>
Pritchard, c  0<lb/>
Johnson, g  5<lb/>
Crowder, g 0<lb/>
Hebbe, g  3<lb/>
Russell Sparks Buccaneers<lb/>
In Tenth Conference Victory<lb/>
by Jack Scott<lb/>
Sonny Russell's 32 poratg spark<lb/>
the East Carolina Pirates to an 86-6"<lb/>
victory over the Western Carolir<lb/>
Catamounts Saturday night in BCC's<lb/>
Memorial gym before a crowd of<lb/>
2,000 cheering fans. In winning their<lb/>
fourth straight game, the Bucs gahved<lb/>
revenge for the 102-97 loss to WCTC<lb/>
With resolved victories over three earlier this season' and strengthened<lb/>
pressing North State foes, High<lb/>
Point, ACC and Western Carolina,<lb/>
the Pirates have elevated themselves<lb/>
to "the team to beat" pedestal. The<lb/>
High Point and AQC games could be<lb/>
classed as mediocre contests, but the<lb/>
Western Carolina fray was vibrate<lb/>
and thrilling. From this corner, it<lb/>
look like East Carolina as confer-<lb/>
ence champions.<lb/>
An enlightening incident during the<lb/>
WCTC encounter came as freshman<lb/>
guard J. C. Thomas stole the leather-<lb/>
covered sphere and raced down the<lb/>
court. Suddenly and tragically he lost<lb/>
possession by over-anxiousness. On<lb/>
losing the ball J. C. erroneously but<lb/>
rib-ticklingly uttered a "naughty"<lb/>
word. For censor purposes the word<lb/>
can not be printed, (but you can rest<lb/>
assured it caused much delightful<lb/>
delirium.<lb/>
The Circle K has most admirably<lb/>
g g decided to present a trophy to the<lb/>
4 lg most valuable basketball player at<lb/>
4 10<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
2 13<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
4 6<lb/>
2 0<lb/>
. rte quite Sure,<lb/>
f red a??J n?7 S<lb/>
, mi beTconvince" e best - ,<lb/>
, c Lauterbach<lb/>
Edward ?? <lb/>
y.CX.A-<lb/>
fand treasure,<lb/>
- S5a?<lb/>
LUCKIES<lb/>
TASTE BETTER!<lb/>
Cleaner, Fresher, Smoother!<lb/>
Ask yourself this question: Why do I smoke?<lb/>
You know, yourself, you smoke for enjoyment<lb/>
And you get enjoyment only from the taste of a<lb/>
cigarette.<lb/>
Luckies taste better-cleaner, fresher, smoother!<lb/>
WhvLuckies are made better to taste better. And,<lb/>
what's more, Luckies are made of fine tobacco.<lb/>
L.S.MP.TLucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco.<lb/>
So, for the thing you want most in a cigarette <lb/>
for better taste-for the cleaner, fresher, smoother<lb/>
taste of Lucky Strike <lb/>
Be Happy-GO LUCKY!<lb/>
Totals ? 18 23 31 59<lb/>
East Carolina (92) fg ft pf tp<lb/>
Russell, f 8 3 1 19<lb/>
Carr, f-c 2 2 5 6<lb/>
Huffman, f-c 9 4 2 22<lb/>
O'Kelley, f  0 3 0 3<lb/>
Gay, f  1113<lb/>
Hodges, c  6 4 3 15<lb/>
Hayes, c ?? 3 2 0 8<lb/>
Heath, g  2 12 5<lb/>
Moye, g 0 0 0 0<lb/>
Hilburn, g  0 111<lb/>
Thomas, g  15 3 7<lb/>
Jones, g-f  112 3<lb/>
Totals ? 33 26 22 92<lb/>
Score by quarters:<lb/>
Atlantic Christian 12 19 18 10?59<lb/>
East Carolina  26 22 23 21?92<lb/>
i:?? Stone<lb/>
CIGARETTES<lb/>
Where's your ingle?<lb/>
It's easier than you think to<lb/>
make $25 by writing a Lucky<lb/>
Strike jingle like those you see<lb/>
in this ad. Yes, we need jingles<lb/>
-and we pay $25 for every one<lb/>
we use! So send as many as you<lb/>
like to: Happy-Go-Lucky, P. O.<lb/>
Box 67, New York 46, N. Y.<lb/>
-vi ????&amp;'? -twn-ifa<lb/>
J?c4?c&amp;?et AM??CA'S ?AmHO UAHO?ACT?.? OW CI04.1W<lb/>
mmt mummm - umihuy mm<lb/>
59to6??<lb/>
BISSETTE'S<lb/>
DRUG STORE<lb/>
416 Evans Street<lb/>
the termination of the season. This<lb/>
is a most honorable decision and more<lb/>
campus clubs should follow suit. With<lb/>
the many organizations we have<lb/>
awards could be presented in every<lb/>
sport. Less awards are presented here<lb/>
at East Carolina for athletics than<lb/>
any other school we can th;nk of.<lb/>
Each club could have the presenta-<lb/>
tions as one of their biggest projects.<lb/>
Our compliments to the Circle K op<lb/>
its ingenuity.<lb/>
their hold on first place in the Nor i<lb/>
State conference.<lb/>
Western Carolina led most of the<lb/>
first quarter and held a 23-19 ad-<lb/>
vantage at the end of the period.<lb/>
Early in the second quarter, WCT<lb/>
jumped to a nine point lead but thj<lb/>
Bucs came back strong and wert<lb/>
ahead shortly btfore the quarter<lb/>
ended. The Pirates led 41-37 at ha1<lb/>
time.<lb/>
East Carolina broke loose in the<lb/>
third period for 23 points while<lb/>
holding the visiting Cat3 to only 14<lb/>
and held a lSpoint lead, 64-51, after<lb/>
three quarters of play.<lb/>
The Catamounts never threatened<lb/>
the EOC lead and tallied only 16<lb/>
points in the final period while the<lb/>
Bucs were netting 22 to make the<lb/>
final score 86-67.<lb/>
Western Carolina's Little All-<lb/>
American, Ronald Rodgers, was held<lb/>
to 11 points, two field goals and<lb/>
seven out of 14 free throws. High<lb/>
scorer for WCTC was McCormick<lb/>
with 17 points while Straehla was<lb/>
close behind with 15.<lb/>
Bobby Hodges followed Russell in<lb/>
the scoring column with 21 markers,<lb/>
while Charlie Huffman accounted for<lb/>
19.<lb/>
WCTC (67) fg ft pf tp<lb/>
Ray, f  5<lb/>
Puliiam, f 0<lb/>
Jordan, f 2<lb/>
Martin, f , 0<lb/>
McComick, c  5<lb/>
Shamel, c-f  1<lb/>
The winter football rehearsals are<lb/>
in its final stages and the results<lb/>
have been pleasing to Coaches Boone<lb/>
and Biggers. Stalwart determination<lb/>
has been shown and the fight for j Russell, f<lb/>
positions has closely resembled the Carr, f-c  0<lb/>
Rodgers, g 2<lb/>
Straehla, g 7<lb/>
Simpson, g  2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
7<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
5 11<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
1 5<lb/>
5 0<lb/>
5 17<lb/>
2 3<lb/>
3 11<lb/>
3 15<lb/>
0 4<lb/>
Totals <lb/>
East Carolina (86)<lb/>
 24 19 28 67<lb/>
fg ft pf tp<lb/>
14<lb/>
furiousness of the Korean battles.<lb/>
Optimism is definitely in the air<lb/>
concerning the Pirates' chances for<lb/>
North State supremacy -next fall.<lb/>
NS Standings<lb/>
The standings through Wednesday<lb/>
night's games are:<lb/>
W L Pet.<lb/>
East Carolina 11 2 .846<lb/>
Elon  6 3 .667<lb/>
Western Carolina 8 4 .667<lb/>
High Point  5 4 .555<lb/>
Appalachian  4 6 .400<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne  4 5 .444<lb/>
AOC 3 6 .333<lb/>
Guilford 4 7 .364<lb/>
Catawba  1 9 .100<lb/>
Good Food, Reasonable Priees<lb/>
and Friendly Atmosphere<lb/>
BEST IN FOOD<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH<lb/>
Huffman, f-c<lb/>
Hodges, c ?<lb/>
Heath, g <lb/>
Moye, g<lb/>
Hilburn, g ?<lb/>
7<lb/>
S<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
Thomas, g  1<lb/>
Jones, g-f ? 1<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
7<lb/>
0<lb/>
4 32<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
1 18<lb/>
5 21<lb/>
5 4<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
9<lb/>
2<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
 32 22 23 86<lb/>
Score by quarters:<lb/>
WCTC <lb/>
EOC<lb/>
23 14 14 1<lb/>
19 22 23<lb/>
J. C. PENNEY CO<lb/>
"Always First Quality"<lb/>
WE CAN OUTFIT<lb/>
COLLEGE STUD1N1<lb/>
COMPLETELY - <lb/>
AND SAVE YOU MONB1!<lb/>
I<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN FOOTWEAR<lb/>
It's<lb/>
. - J MERIT SHOES<lb/>
mb<lb/>
Sterling Silver<lb/>
Friendship Rings<lb/>
With College Set'<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Stoj<lb/>
'MHMBMMkMMMi<lb/>
II?I ?I ? !?!?!?<lb/>
<pb facs="00038315_0004"/><lb/>
PAGE POUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6,195<lb/>
'Citizenship In Action' Theme<lb/>
Of State Woman's Club Meet<lb/>
"The great ddteh separating the<lb/>
free world from the slave world runs<lb/>
into your back yard Dr. Guion<lb/>
Johnson of Chapel Hill, president of<lb/>
the North Carolina Woman's council,<lb/>
told approximately 175 members of<lb/>
eastern North Carolina women's cluba<lb/>
at a conference on "Citizenship in<lb/>
Action" Friday at East Carolina col-<lb/>
lege. She challenged her audience to<lb/>
accept the responsibilities of citizen-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
The conference was one of three<lb/>
scheduled to be held in the state<lb/>
within Jie next few weeks. Asheville<lb/>
and Durham have tbeen chosen as<lb/>
other meeting places.<lb/>
U-nder the leadership of Mrs. L. B.<lb/>
Pate of New Bern, the conference at<lb/>
East Carolina was called by leaders<lb/>
in Home Demonstration clubs in the<lb/>
eastern counties, and was attended<lb/>
by representatives of seven women's<lb/>
organizations having branches in va-<lb/>
rious towns of the area.<lb/>
Women, Dr. Johnson told her au-<lb/>
dience, must accept the duties of the<lb/>
good citizen. She distinguished be-<lb/>
tween "the no-time, the part-time,<lb/>
and the full-time" citizen.<lb/>
"The full-time citizen she ex-<lb/>
plained, "meets responsibilities day<lb/>
in and day out, asks earching ques-<lb/>
tions, is able to separate prejudice<lb/>
from fact, knows the pressure groups<lb/>
. . . and is never too busy to follow<lb/>
through in the day-by-day routine of<lb/>
making democracy work in our coun-<lb/>
try<lb/>
A luncheon and an evaluation meet-<lb/>
, ing led by Dr. Johnson completed the<lb/>
day's events.<lb/>
PATRONIZE THE<lb/>
Y STORE<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
BAKERY PRODUCTS<lb/>
PEOPLES BAKERY<lb/>
<lb/>
Five Have Opportunity<lb/>
To Join Business Frat<lb/>
Because of their excellent scho-<lb/>
lastic records in the department of<lb/>
business education at East Carolina<lb/>
college, five students have received<lb/>
invitations to become members of<lb/>
the campus Beta Kappa chapter of<lb/>
the national honorary fraternity Pi<lb/>
Omega Pi. A pledge service for new<lb/>
members will be held Monday, Febr-<lb/>
uary 16, and initiation is scheduled<lb/>
for the spring quarter.<lb/>
Those who have been honored by<lb/>
invitations to join the Beta Kappa<lb/>
chapter are Clement M. Gray, Tren-<lb/>
ton; James K. Thompson, Goldsboro;<lb/>
W. Horace Baker, Zebulon- A. Nor-<lb/>
man Hines Holly Ridge; and Mrs.<lb/>
Ann H. Phillips, Greenville.<lb/>
GARRIS GROCERY<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S FOOD CENTER<lb/>
Ettst Fifth and Cotanche Streets<lb/>
TO BE IN STYLE<lb/>
TRY OUR LINE OF MEN'S CLOTHING<lb/>
The FRANK WILSON Store<lb/>
King Clothiers Since 1893<lb/>
Art Professors<lb/>
Exhibiting Work<lb/>
In Local Gallery<lb/>
John Gordon and Francis Neel,<lb/>
faculty members of the department<lb/>
of art at East Carolina colleere, are<lb/>
currently exhibiting 21 of their works<lb/>
at the Community Art galley in the<lb/>
Sheppard Memorial library of Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Included in the exhibition are oils,<lb/>
gouache paintings, etchings and mo-<lb/>
bile sculpture. Subjects treated by the<lb/>
college artists are seascapes, human<lb/>
figures, animals and abstract designs.<lb/>
The exhibition is Mr. Gordon's first<lb/>
since he joined the East Carolina<lb/>
faeulty last September. A native of<lb/>
Kentucky, he holds the degree of<lb/>
master of fine arts from the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Iowa and has studied in<lb/>
France at the Beaux Arts school in<lb/>
Marseilles and at Biarritz university.<lb/>
At the college he teaches courses in<lb/>
aesthetics, art education and drawing.<lb/>
Mr. Neel, who has previously ex-<lb/>
hibited his works locally at the an-<lb/>
nual Pitt county Community Arts<lb/>
festival and at the city and the college<lb/>
libraries, is acting director of the<lb/>
department of art at East Carolina.<lb/>
His etchings, water colors and oil<lb/>
jointings have-won prizes in several<lb/>
exhibitions in his home state of Mis-<lb/>
souri, and one of his works was re-<lb/>
cently included in a regional exhi-<lb/>
bition at the High Mustum in At-<lb/>
lanta, Ga.<lb/>
Pirates Win Over Appalachian<lb/>
79-67 As Russell Scores 28<lb/>
Novelist Speaks Here<lb/>
Records and Sheet Music<lb/>
45 RPM Accessories<lb/>
McCORMICK<lb/>
MUSIC STORE<lb/>
Sonny Russell and Company took<lb/>
their eleventh win of the season on<lb/>
Monday night, as they downed the<lb/>
Appalachian Mountaineers 79 to 67<lb/>
on the opposition's court. The Bucs<lb/>
broke a seven year jinx by winning<lb/>
in the App gym.<lb/>
Russell set a blistering pace as he<lb/>
dropped in 28 points and led the<lb/>
team in floor play. Center Bobby<lb/>
Hodges was next high for the Porter-<lb/>
men with a valuable 16 points.<lb/>
The first half showed signs of a<lb/>
very low score. EOC led at the end<lb/>
of the first period 18 to 15. The apps<lb/>
held a slight halfime edge of 29-27.<lb/>
The third quarter changed all that<lb/>
as the Pirates copped 33 points to<lb/>
the A; ps 19.<lb/>
Four Bucs broke into the doti' le<lb/>
figures. Behind Russell and Hodges<lb/>
were J. C. Thomas and Cecil Heath,<lb/>
with 12 and 10, respectively.<lb/>
Appalachian guard O. D. Wallace<lb/>
was high man for the Westerners<lb/>
with 19 points.<lb/>
The box:<lb/>
ECC<lb/>
Russell, f<lb/>
Carr, f<lb/>
Huffman, f<lb/>
O'Kelley, f<lb/>
B. Hodges, c<lb/>
Hayes, c<lb/>
Heath, g<lb/>
Moye, g<lb/>
Hilburn, g<lb/>
Thomas, g<lb/>
Jones, g<lb/>
Welch, f -<lb/>
Campbell, c<lb/>
.Phillips, c<lb/>
R. Hodges, g<lb/>
Homesley, g<lb/>
Wallace, g<lb/>
Haithcock, g<lb/>
Total .<lb/>
001 0<lb/>
522 12<lb/>
121 4<lb/>
325 8<lb/>
143 6<lb/>
752 19<lb/>
002 6<lb/>
2321U 87<lb/>
fg tf pf tp<lb/>
9 10 3 28<lb/>
0 0 0 0<lb/>
2 2 2 6<lb/>
0 0 0 0<lb/>
6 4 3 16<lb/>
0 0 0 0<lb/>
5 0 3 10<lb/>
0 0 0 0<lb/>
0 0 10<lb/>
Pitt Alumni Sponsor<lb/>
Card Tourney To Aid<lb/>
College Scholarship<lb/>
The Pitt County Memorial Schol<lb/>
arship foundation will benefit firom ?<lb/>
bridge and canasta tournament jr v, r<lb/>
February 13 by the Pitt County chap-<lb/>
ter of the College Alumni MM ?a-<lb/>
tion. The eveit will take place at<lb/>
8 p.m. in the college dining hall and<lb/>
is expected to be attended by a large<lb/>
number of people.<lb/>
Proceeds will go to the college<lb/>
scholarship fund. Friends of East<lb/>
Carolina in Pitt county are now in<lb/>
piocess of raising a sum of $100,000<lb/>
to be used to aid worthy and needy<lb/>
students who wish to attend the col-<lb/>
lege but are financially unaMe to<lb/>
do so.<lb/>
 Mcbaac Holoman Burgwyn of<lb/>
Woodland, North Carolina novelist,<lb/>
vill diaeosfl "Writiag for Young Peo-<lb/>
??'? at ? joint Meeting of (he student<lb/>
. n?li-h club, the Association for<lb/>
' hildhood Education ami the Future<lb/>
Teacher of Am rica at Eaat Carolina<lb/>
?oil ??? Paaadaj at 7i0 p. m. in the<lb/>
( allege theater.<lb/>
4<lb/>
o<lb/>
5 12<lb/>
1 7<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
Appalachian<lb/>
Trammell, f<lb/>
Brown, f-c<lb/>
Stanley, f<lb/>
Blackburn, f<lb/>
28 23 19 79<lb/>
fg tf pf tp<lb/>
3 3 3 9<lb/>
2 0 5 4<lb/>
13 0 5<lb/>
0 0 0 0<lb/>
College Students<lb/>
COME IN AND SEE<lb/>
OUR FINE SELECTION OF SUITS and COATS<lb/>
C. HEBER FORBES<lb/>
Good Food ? Sandwiches<lb/>
CAROLINA GRILL<lb/>
a<lb/>
24 Hour Service<lb/>
Bunch's Shoe Service<lb/>
Expert Shoe Repairing<lb/>
510 Cotanehe Street<lb/>
Lost And Found<lb/>
Dr. Clinton R. Prm ? ?? ;?ari<lb/>
men and director of -? a,f .<lb/>
at Beat Carolina, La,<lb/>
?ever itema of clothing<lb/>
I at D turned in to him. D<lb/>
ammente, "All of then<lb/>
in very gaod i III<lb/>
sure their owners would<lb/>
thtir return<lb/>
wool overcoat,<lb/>
? proximal lj 40; .?<lb/>
iine jacket, blue<lb/>
,? proximal<lb/>
i'k ker<lb/>
ier .a<lb/>
amptu are kx<lb/>
<lb/>
.?? them. If rj wj<lb/>
y inquire ?. rl<lb/>
two places.<lb/>
ilina's 1943<lb/>
H Poin<lb/>
ad of jii;iy i; ; J<lb/>
of the most I<lb/>
enjoj<lb/>
 "I<lb/>
 H. L. Hodges &amp; Co. <lb/>
PAIXTS and Hardware<lb/>
<lb/>
Far Drur Hull. Coamatics and Fountain Goods<lb/>
Visit<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
Proctor Hotal Baildin<lb/>
?yaa 8 A. M. - If P. M. ? Sunday 8:30 A. M. - 10 :S0 A. M.f<lb/>
4 P. M. - 10 P. M.<lb/>
PERKINS-PROCTOR<lb/>
"The House of Name Brands"<lb/>
?? <lb/>
Better Shoes Reasonably Priced<lb/>
AT<lb/>
JACKSON'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
517 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
YOU ARE WELCOME TO<lb/>
Mrs. Morton's Bakery<lb/>
Kares Restaurant<lb/>
For Best In<lb/>
LUNCHES and SNACKS<lb/>
Sending Valentines<lb/>
is the perfect way<lb/>
to remember friends<lb/>
and sweethearts<lb/>
on this special day<lb/>
CAROLINA OFF1C<lb/>
EQUIPMENT (O.<lb/>
30-1 Evans St. Dial<lb/>
"Your College Shop<lb/>
M<lb/>
21 B. Fifth 9raat<lb/>
Greenville, N. C<lb/>
M????ft?????????????'<lb/>
QUALITY JEWELRY<lb/>
At Prieoa To Meet Your Budget<lb/>
Tour Headquarters For<lb/>
Buiova Watches<lb/>
Also<lb/>
HAMILTON BENRUS<lb/>
ELGIN WADSWORTH<lb/>
. Scientifically Trained Mechanics To Serve You<lb/>
STAUFFER'S JEWELERS<lb/>
Evans Street Phone 2452 j<lb/>
1- <lb/>
FOOT LONG HOTDOGS<lb/>
? a it ot<lb/>
???.<lb/>
<lb/>
,?<lb/>
v v<lb/>
mt<lb/>
??'<lb/>
25c<lb/>
CHICKEN AND SHRIMP<lb/>
IN-THE-BOX<lb/>
ANY ORDER OF<lb/>
OR MORE<lb/>
DIAL 5741<lb/>
SEW DR1VE.1N<lb/>
WTD CIRCLE<lb/>
iiTf????y?f?????????????<lb/>
NOW10 Months Scientific Evidence<lb/>
For Chesterfield<lb/>
A medical specialist is making regular bi-<lb/>
monthly examinations of a group of people<lb/>
from various walks of life. 45 percent of this<lb/>
group have smoked Chesterfield for an average<lb/>
of over ten years.<lb/>
After ten months, the medical specialist reports<lb/>
that he observed<lb/>
no adverse effects on the nose, throat and<lb/>
sinuses of the group from smoking Chesterfield.<lb/>
MUCH MilDEB<lb/>
CHESTERFIEU)<lb/>
IS BEST FOR YOU<lb/>
Tui<lb/>
On<lb/>
VOlM<lb/>
s<lb/>
Seen<lb/>
OfF<lb/>
Jnl<lb/>
fa 1937<lb/>
aor. <lb/>
I<lb/>
Coll<lb/>
For<lb/>
?na I<lb/>
?'?ST<lb/>
Final J<lb/>
Kaa <lb/>
Policy<lb/>
qua:<lb/>
dents,<lb/>
Arrive<lb/>
?ra<lb/>
t x<lb/>
hh<lb/>
eollajf<lb/>
 tha<lb/>
v<lb/>
Copynfhc 19)), Usoirr at Unu ToutfTO Ca<lb/>
Enroll<lb/>
<pb facs="00038315_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>